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Wall Street cools on AI as tech stocks tumble amid recession fears
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Wall Street’s AI enthusiasm is cooling amid tariff uncertainty and a tech stock downturn, highlighting the gap between massive infrastructure investments and unclear revenue paths. The tech-heavy Nasdaq has fallen 10.5% this year—more than double the S&P 500’s decline—as investors reassess AI’s immediate value proposition while navigating broader economic headwinds from potential Trump tariffs and recession fears.

The big picture: The first quarter of 2025 has been punishing for tech stocks, with AI-focused companies particularly affected as Wall Street enters what analysts call the “Trough of Disillusionment” following excessive optimism.

  • The Nasdaq 100 index has dropped 10.5% this year, significantly underperforming the broader S&P 500.
  • Nvidia, a central player in the AI hardware boom, has shed $1 trillion in market value.

Behind the numbers: Big Tech companies have poured billions into AI capabilities and data center construction with little clarity on how these investments will generate revenue in the near term.

  • Microsoft has reportedly canceled some data center projects, suggesting concerns about future demand.
  • Alibaba Group Chairman Joe Tsai recently warned of “the beginning of some kind of bubble” around data center construction.

Why this matters: The AI investment slowdown represents a market correction rather than a complete abandonment of the technology, as companies adjust spending to economic realities.

  • “That doesn’t mean AI is not going to happen… It’s just going to take longer,” explained D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria.
  • The vision for AI remains intact even as investment pace slows, benefiting from the substantial funding already deployed.

Economic context: The cooling AI market coincides with broader economic concerns that are forcing companies to reconsider their aggressive investment strategies.

  • Economists currently place the odds of a U.S. recession this year at approximately 50/50.
  • Inflation has recently increased while consumer spending shows signs of weakening.

What they’re saying: Analysts see President Trump’s upcoming tariff announcement as a critical moment for markets and the tech sector.

  • “In covering tech stocks and markets the last 25 years, we have seen some ‘fork in the road’ political moments that have created major uncertainty for the markets… and this Trump tariff announcement is up at the top of that list,” noted Wedbush analyst Dan Ives.

The bottom line: Rather than a dramatic bubble burst, the AI sector is experiencing a gradual deflation as companies temper expectations while navigating economic uncertainty and the unclear impact of potential tariffs.

The ‘AI bubble’ isn’t bursting, but tariff chaos is helping deflate it

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